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      Fructose-rich niches traced the evolution of lactic acid bacteria toward fructophilic species

      1 , 2 , 2 , 1 , 2
      Critical Reviews in Microbiology
      Informa UK Limited

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          Bacteriocins: developing innate immunity for food.

          Bacteriocins are bacterially produced antimicrobial peptides with narrow or broad host ranges. Many bacteriocins are produced by food-grade lactic acid bacteria, a phenomenon which offers food scientists the possibility of directing or preventing the development of specific bacterial species in food. This can be particularly useful in preservation or food safety applications, but also has implications for the development of desirable flora in fermented food. In this sense, bacteriocins can be used to confer a rudimentary form of innate immunity to foodstuffs, helping processors extend their control over the food flora long after manufacture.
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            Health benefits of fermented foods: microbiota and beyond.

            Fermented foods and beverages were among the first processed food products consumed by humans. The production of foods such as yogurt and cultured milk, wine and beer, sauerkraut and kimchi, and fermented sausage were initially valued because of their improved shelf life, safety, and organoleptic properties. It is increasingly understood that fermented foods can also have enhanced nutritional and functional properties due to transformation of substrates and formation of bioactive or bioavailable end-products. Many fermented foods also contain living microorganisms of which some are genetically similar to strains used as probiotics. Although only a limited number of clinical studies on fermented foods have been performed, there is evidence that these foods provide health benefits well-beyond the starting food materials.
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              Complete genome sequence of Lactobacillus plantarum WCFS1.

              The 3,308,274-bp sequence of the chromosome of Lactobacillus plantarum strain WCFS1, a single colony isolate of strain NCIMB8826 that was originally isolated from human saliva, has been determined, and contains 3,052 predicted protein-encoding genes. Putative biological functions could be assigned to 2,120 (70%) of the predicted proteins. Consistent with the classification of L. plantarum as a facultative heterofermentative lactic acid bacterium, the genome encodes all enzymes required for the glycolysis and phosphoketolase pathways, all of which appear to belong to the class of potentially highly expressed genes in this organism, as was evident from the codon-adaptation index of individual genes. Moreover, L. plantarum encodes a large pyruvate-dissipating potential, leading to various end-products of fermentation. L. plantarum is a species that is encountered in many different environmental niches, and this flexible and adaptive behavior is reflected by the relatively large number of regulatory and transport functions, including 25 complete PTS sugar transport systems. Moreover, the chromosome encodes >200 extracellular proteins, many of which are predicted to be bound to the cell envelope. A large proportion of the genes encoding sugar transport and utilization, as well as genes encoding extracellular functions, appear to be clustered in a 600-kb region near the origin of replication. Many of these genes display deviation of nucleotide composition, consistent with a foreign origin. These findings suggest that these genes, which provide an important part of the interaction of L. plantarum with its environment, form a lifestyle adaptation region in the chromosome.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Critical Reviews in Microbiology
                Critical Reviews in Microbiology
                Informa UK Limited
                1040-841X
                1549-7828
                January 10 2019
                January 02 2019
                January 21 2019
                January 02 2019
                : 45
                : 1
                : 65-81
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Department of Soil, Plant and Food Science, University of Bari Aldo Moro, Bari, Italy;
                [2 ] Faculty of Science and Technology, Libera Università di Bolzano, Bolzano, Italy
                Article
                10.1080/1040841X.2018.1543649
                30663917
                0580b2ae-1e2b-4c77-aa67-77c6befe6b2e
                © 2019
                History

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